to stop teaching Ned.” As he said the words, Kit realized their oddity. Why couldn’t Johnson simply stop his boy from attending?
It took more than half an hour of carefully probing questions and considerable patience to tease the full tale from Johnson, but finally, Kit felt he had it straight.
The problem centered on Johnson’s fear that, once educated, Ned wouldn’t want anything to do with his father. That fear was compounded by the fact that, at the present time, Ned wasn’t living with Johnson but with Johnson’s sister-in-law.
Johnson finally relaxed enough to explain, “I lost my Myra shortly after Ned was born, see, and then I lost my job when the big shipyards moved down to Avonmouth. I couldn’t pay the rent after that, and so I had to move to one of the working men’s hostels. That was no place for Ned—and that’s when Cora, Myra’s sister, took Ned in.” Johnson swiped his cap across his mouth and, almost in a whisper, went on, “I might get work if I move to Avonmouth, but I don’t want to leave Ned behind.” The big man met Kit’s gaze, his own full of quiet anguish. “He’s all I have left.”
Kit nodded. “I understand.” And he did; Johnson’s devotion to his son was written all over his homely face.
“It’s not that I’ve anything against the school itself, mind,” Johnson conceded, his mind plainly following a track much trodden. “All of the people there seem nice, not that I’ve spoken to them, but you can tell—the kids all like them and are happy at the school. But in my case—in Ned’s case—that’s not the problem.” Johnson raised his gaze to Kit’s face. “Once Ned learns a trade, he won’t want anything more to do with me—I’ll just be his out-of-work, layabout father. Cora’s already hinted that I shouldn’t come around to her house too often, that Ned would be better off being left to make his own way...”
Johnson choked and looked down. After a moment, in a remarkably small voice for such a mountain of a man, he whispered, “But he’s all I have.”
Kit was suddenly beyond certain that he wanted to help—that he would help Johnson and his Ned.
After a second of rapid thought, he said, “Buck up, Johnson. I think I can see a way around this.”
Blinking, Johnson looked up. “You can?” As yet, there was no sign of hope in his eyes.
Slowly, Kit nodded. “I can.” Reminded of Mulligan’s warning about Johnson’s pride, Kit said, “I’m willing to make a deal with you, one I believe will solve all your troubles and get you back to where you want to be—by which I mean living in your own place with Ned. Am I right in thinking that’s what you want?”
Now hope flared in Johnson’s eyes, but was swiftly reined back by native shrewdness. “Yes. But how?” He swallowed and asked, “What deal?”
“I’ll explain in a moment, but first, I want you to clarify something for me.” Kit hadn’t missed the reference to the people at the school. “Have you been watching the school?”
Johnson’s expression turned wary, but he nodded. “At times. I just wanted to see Ned, but I didn’t want to go up to him while he was with his friends, so I just looked from out there”—he tipped his head, indicating outside the workshop—“and now the school’s moved, from the Abbey gardens at the end of the street or from down on the Butts.”
“Have you ever seen Miss Buckleberry—the lady who runs the school?”
Johnson nodded. “Nice-looking lady—what does she want with running a school?”
Kit hid a wry grin and said, “She’s a clergyman’s daughter.”
As he’d expected, that made perfect sense to Johnson, who mouthed an “Oh,” and nodded.
“On the days you saw Miss Buckleberry,” Kit said, “did you ever follow her?”
Johnson looked sheepish as he met Kit’s eyes. “I did once or twice. Well, several times. I was trying to get up the courage to speak to her about Ned, but...well, I couldn’t. I don’t rightly know how to speak with ladies.”
Satisfied—and significantly relieved at the thought that it had most likely been Johnson, who was no threat to anyone, who Sylvia had sensed watching her—Kit nodded and swung his thoughts to how best to manage the big man; he had no wish to see a good man, a good worker and potentially good father, lost. “So now, here’s my deal. First, how old is Ned?”
“Eleven,” Johnson said.
That would work. “I want Ned to remain at school, and